On This Day

The great accumulator

1981
To his undisguised satisfaction, Geoff Boycott broke Garry Sobers' Test record of 8032 runs. No one was unduly surprised that he went on to make a century, his 22nd and last at this level. The Delhi Test was drawn, and before the tour was over Boycott had returned to England with his reputation intact: as a genuinely great accumulator of runs and a complicated human being.

2000
A real nailbiter decided the Cricinfo Women's World Cup. In the final in Lincoln, hosts New Zealand won the toss, batted, and were all out for 184. Tight bowling by Katrina Keenan and Rachel Pullar helped dismiss hot favourites Australia in the last over, leaving New Zealand just the third country after England and Australia to win the trophy after seven such tournaments.

1984
Another Master Blaster masterclass by Viv Richards. His double ton in Melbourne was the first by a West Indian in a Test in Australia - but the drawn result put an end to West Indies' run of 11 consecutive Test wins.

1957
Two of Australia's stalwarts of the 1960s made their Test debuts in Johannesburg. Bobby Simpson scored 60 in the first innings and wicketkeeper Wally Grout held six catches in the second. Ian Meckiff, who made his debut in the same game, later retired after being called for throwing in a Test.

1972
With a right arm withered by polio but spitting legspin spite, Bhagwat Chandrasekhar achieved his best Test figures of 8 for 79. England won this Delhi Test but eventually lost the series, in which Chandra took 35
wickets.

1909
Birth of seam bowler Don Cleverley, who appeared in only two Tests for New Zealand - a long way apart. After playing against South Africa at Christchurch in 1931-32, he wasn't picked again until the massacre by Australia in Wellington in 1945-46. His gap of 14 years 28 days between Tests is the fourth-longest of all time, behind only John Traicos of South Africa and Zimbabwe, George Gunn of England, Younis Ahmed of Pakistan, and South Africa's Mick Commaille.

1894
Birth of one of the relatively few pace bowlers to captain England. Arthur Gilligan formed a sharp opening attack with Maurice Tate for Sussex and England. Between them they dismissed South Africa for only 30 in the Edgbaston Test of 1924, Gilligan finishing with eyebrow-raising figures of 6 for 7. Although Australia retained the Ashes the following winter, Gilligan led England to an innings win in Melbourne, their first win over the old enemy since the First World War.